Cape Breton Post

Doctors, migrants call for free vaccinatio­ns

- Lu.xu@saltwire.com @XMenglu

Lily is a long-term care worker. She is a qualified, skilled caregiver with more than six years of work experience in Canada. She is also undocument­ed and was recently denied COVID19 vaccinatio­ns because of her lack of status.

Lily didn't come to Canada illegally. She came to Canada on a work permit under the caregiver program in 2014, leaving her family for what she thought would be a much better future.

Lily said she became undocument­ed in Jan 2020 as a result of a long, confusing immigratio­n process.

“This was to be a journey so confusing and disappoint­ing I still cannot believe it happened. They tried to do the paperwork for me to get my work permit five times, waiting to hear from the Immigratio­n Department as to what was going on,” said Lily, who is originally from the Caribbean, in a press conference on Wednesday to call for a safe, accessible vaccine strategy for migrant workers.

The online meeting was joined by leading doctors and health policy experts, along with advocacy groups.

Hundreds of organizati­ons have signed an open letter co-ordinated by the Migrant Rights Network, which outlines the barriers migrants are facing, as well as specific solutions to ensure vaccines are accessible to all.

Lily is one of many migrant workers in Canada who don't have a health card either because they are undocument­ed or have expiring permits due to government processing delays.

One in 23 people in Canada doesn't have permanent resident status. Many are in essential jobs including long-term healthcare, cleaning, constructi­on, delivery, and agricultur­e.

Pauline Wosford, the RN Chair Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (CFNU), said at the conference that migrants should be included in the vaccine rollout, not as an afterthoug­ht, but as a “conscious decision.”

“So my question is currently what is our goal? What is our goal, overall, for everybody in this country? It's to eliminate COVID so that we can have safe and healthy communitie­s. It means the vaccine should be provided for me – for whoever needs it,” said Worsford.

WHAT’S HAPPENING IN NOVA SCOTIA

Currently, migrants who are from outside of Canada will only be eligible if they have a work permit that lasts longer than 12 months. Landing internatio­nal students with a study permit will have to wait for a year before they become eligible.

However, according to the provincial website, that eligibilit­y for both groups is void if the person has left the province for more than 31 consecutiv­e days in the past year.

The Department of Health and Wellness didn't answer whether the province will be providing vaccines to workers without an MSI.

“Those that reside in Nova Scotia permanentl­y or temporaril­y will be eligible to be vaccinated when it is available for their age group. Details on that process are currently being worked out,” said Province of Nova Scotia spokespers­on Marla MacInnis in an email.

The lack of “a stronger commitment” worries Halifax advocacy group, No One is Illegal - Halifax/K'jipuktuk (NOIIHfx), which also joined the announceme­nt on Wednesday. The organizati­on is urging provincial officials to ensure vaccines are available to everyone in Nova Scotia, regardless of immigratio­n status.

“We haven't heard the province really address people without migration status, people who are undocument­ed, or who don't have access to MSI, how are they going to get access to the vaccine. So that's something that's really concerning for us as well,” said the organizer of NOII-Hfx, Stacy Gomez.

Ontario and a few other provinces have temporaril­y expanded health insurance coverage to include all migrants in response to COVID-19.

According to the government website, Ontario has waived the three-month waiting period for Ontario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) coverage. Additional­ly, the province will cover the cost of COVID19 services for uninsured people who do not meet the criteria for OHIP coverage.

“Together, these measures will ensure that no one will be discourage­d from seeking screening or treatment for COVID-19 for financial reasons,” reads the government website.

PRIVATE, CONFIDENTI­AL PROCESS IMPORTANT

Doctors and community leaders at the conference all emphasized a “private” and “confidenti­al” process of vaccinatio­n as they are worried undocument­ed people avoid getting it in fear of deportatio­n.

“Many uninsured people with precarious status also worry of being reported to the Canadian Border Services Agency to face detention or deportatio­n. Some, as a result, may avoid receiving the vaccine altogether,” said Dr. Daniel Raza, board chair of Canadian doctors for Medicare, a national organizati­on of doctors and healthcare providers.

Canada deported 12,122 people in 2020 – 875 more than the previous year and the highest number since at least 2015, according to Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) data seen by Reuters.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine is shown here.
REUTERS FILE Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine is shown here.

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